The 3Gdb Home Subscriber Server implements the HSS
network element within an IP multimedia subsystem
(IMS) core network (CN). An IMS CN is a collection
of SIP proxies, registrars, and servers used for
the provision of services in a 3GPP all-IP mobile
network. The HSS provides a centralized data base
for subscriber records and generates
authentication vectors.

Tsung is a distributed load testing tool. It is protocol-independent and can currently be used to stress HTTP, WebDAV, PostgreSQL, MySQL, LDAP, AMQP, and XMPP/Jabber servers. It simulates user behavior using an XML description file, reports many measurements in real time (statistics can be customized with transactions, and graphics generated using gnuplot). For HTTP, it supports 1.0 and 1.1, has a proxy mode to record sessions, supports GET, POST, PUT, and DELETE methods, cookies, and basic/digest authentication. It also has support for SSL, WebSocket, and BOSH.

teeterl is a lean, portable implementation of Erlang. teeterl starts from a single executable file without any additional harness. teeterl is built using Apache Portable Runtime, a library tested on dozens of OSes and their flavors. teeterl borrows from industry-standard Erlang/OTP, especially when it comes to compiler front-end. teeterl provides the concurrency power of Erlang without any telecom cruft.

Jingle Nodes is a relay auto-discovery service that provides Jingle Relay Type Candidates that can be used in ICE-UDP and also on RAW-UDP Jingle sessions. Relay candidates can provide NAT traversal for users who don't have STUN/TURN Support, but also for users with STUN/TURN support for whom negotiation failed. It is designed to allow you to communicate freely with your friends without being attached to closed service providers like Skype or telecommunications carriers.

minipush is a RESTful Comet server that does not use any JavaScript libraries. It allows developers to create real-time Web applications easily using their favorite programming languages, such as PHP or Ruby.

MyDLP provides a way to prevent data leakage through data transmission including Web, email, removable devices, printers, screenshots, and other channels. It is open, easy, reliable, and takes only 30 minutes to set up.

VoltDB is a blazingly fast relational database system. It is specifically designed to run on modern scale-out architectures: fast, inexpensive servers connected via high-speed data networks. It is aimed at a new generation of database applications - real-time feeds, sensor-driven data streams, micro-transactions, low-latency trading systems - requiring database throughput that can reach millions of operations per second. What’s more, the applications that use this data must scale on demand, provide flawless fault tolerance, and enable real-time visibility into the data that drives business value. It includes client application drivers for applications written in Java, C++, C#, PHP, and Python. VoltDB community members have also authored client libraries for Erlang, Ruby and Node.js. There are streaming export capabilities for leading analytic database environments, including Apache Hadoop.

epers stands for "Erlang persistence". As the name suggests, it tries to make it easy to use databases in Erlang programs, to make the language a little more agile, and (humbly) offer a nice adapter for several databases, hiding their implementation details (and the API of the library/framework/driver used to communicate with them). To achieve this, it aims to offer a somewhat consistent API to define and work with your model, while at the same not coupling your code too tightly to it.

Ybot is erlang bot software inspired by Github hubot. It supports IRC and XMPP transports and is extensible with plugins. Plugins can be written with Python, Ruby, or shell. It supports IRC chat, XMPP multi user chat, and 37 signals Campfire chat. It can simultaneously run any number of bots on different transports.